Ecomorphological patterns in trigeminal canal branching among sauropsids reveal sensory shift in suchians

Author:

Lessner Emily J.1ORCID,Dollman Kathleen N.2ORCID,Clark James M.3ORCID,Xu Xing45ORCID,Holliday Casey M.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Pathology and Anatomical Sciences University of Missouri Columbia Missouri USA

2. European Synchrotron and Radiation Facility Grenoble France

3. Department of Biological Sciences George Washington University Washington District of Columbia USA

4. Centre for Vertebrate Evolutionary Biology Yunnan University Kunming China

5. Institute of Vertebrate Paleontology and Paleoanthropology Chinese Academy of Sciences Beijing China

Abstract

AbstractThe vertebrate trigeminal nerve is the primary mediator of somatosensory information from nerve endings across the face, extending nerve branches through bony canals in the face and mandibles, terminating in sensory receptors. Reptiles evolved several extreme forms of cranial somatosensation in which enhanced trigeminal tissues are present in species engaging in unique mechanosensory behaviors. However, morphology varies by clade and ecology among reptiles. Few lineages approach the extreme degree of tactile somatosensation possessed by crocodylians, the only remaining members of a clade that underwent an ecological transition from the terrestrial to semiaquatic habitat, also evolving a specialized trigeminal system. It remains to be understood how trigeminal osteological correlates inform how adaptations for enhanced cranial sensation evolved in crocodylians. Here we identify an increase in sensory abilities in Early Jurassic crocodylomorphs, preceding the transitions to a semiaquatic habitat. Through quantification of trigeminal neurovascular canal branching patterns in an extant phylogenetic bracket we quantify and identify morphologies associated with sensory behaviors in representative fossil taxa, we find stepwise progression of increasing neurovascular canal density, complexity, and distribution from the primitive archosaurian to the derived crocodilian condition. Model‐based inferences of sensory ecologies tested on quantified morphologies of extant taxa with known sensory behaviors indicate a parallel increase in sensory abilities among pseudosuchians. These findings establish patterns of reptile trigeminal ecomorphology, revealing evolutionary patterns of somatosensory ecology.

Funder

Evolving Earth Foundation

National Natural Science Foundation of China

National Science Foundation of Sri Lanka

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Cell Biology,Developmental Biology,Molecular Biology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics,Histology,Anatomy

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